Then Ms. O’Donnell made the point that if she was going to be held responsible for things she did before she knew better, the media also should look at her opponent Chris Coons. The student-age Coons may have expressed interest in something like witchcraft, only worse: communism.

“He made some very anti-American statements apologizing for America and calling himself a ‘bearded Marxist,’ ” said O’Donnell on Fox.

Then, as a sophomore, he took Cultural Anthropology, and learned to question the moral superiority of the West. He took a class on the Vietnam War, which, he writes, painted in vivid detail “a picture of the horrible failures made possible by American hubris and dogmatism.”

Then came the final blow: Coons spent spring of his junior year in Kenya on a study program. He lived with a poor family, then heard the Kenyan elites describe the poor as too lazy to get ahead, which bugged him because he didn’t think that was true.

“Experiences like this warned me that my own favorite beliefs in the miracles of free enterprise and the boundless opportunities to be had in America might be largely untrue,” Coons wrote in 1985.

Nowhere in the story does Coons actually call himself a Marxist, a communist, or any "ist" of any kind. However, he does say that he “studied under a bright and eloquent Marxist professor at the University of Nairobi.”

(Also, there are no references to pentagrams or worshiping at a satanic altar, just in case you were wondering.)

Coons today says the “bearded Marxist” reference was tongue-in-cheek.

“I am not now, nor have I ever been, a Marxist or an enemy of the people of the United States,” he said Tuesday night on CNN’s “State of the Union.”